Ten Steps To A Well Optimized Website
Step Four– Content Optimization
Welcome to part four in this search engine positioning series. Last week
we discussed the importance of the structure of your website and the best
practices for creating an easily spidered and easily read site. In part
four we will discuss content optimization.
This is perhaps the single most important aspect of ranking your website
highly on the search engines. While all of the factors covered in this
series will help get your website into the top positions, it is your content
that will sell your product or service and it is your content that the
search engines will be reading when they take their "snapshot" of your
site and determine where it should be placed in relation to the other
billions of pages on the Internet.
Over this series we will cover the ten key aspects to a solid search
engine positioning campaign.
The Ten Steps We Will Go Through Are:
- Keyword
Selection
- Content
Creation
- Site
Structure
- Optimization
- Internal Linking
- Human Testing
- Submissions
- Link Building
- Monitoring
- The Extras
Step Four – Content Optimization
There are aspects of the optimization process that gain and lose importance.
Content optimization is no exception to this. Through the many algorithm
changes that take place each year, the weight given to the content on
your pages rises and falls. Currently incoming links appear to supply
greater advantage than well-written and optimized content. So why are
we taking an entire article in this series to focus on the content optimization?
The goal for anyone following this series is to build and optimize a
website that will rank well on the major search engines and, more difficult
and far more important, hold those rankings through changes in the search
engine algorithms. While currently having a bunch of incoming links from
high PageRank sites will do well for you on Google you must consider what
will happen to your rankings when the weight given to incoming links drops,
or how your website fares on search engines other than Google that don't
place the same emphasis on incoming links.
While there are many characteristics of your content that are in the
algorithmic calculations, there are a few that consistently hold relatively
high priority and thus will be the focus of this article. These are:
- Heading Tags
- Special Text (bold, colored, etc.)
- Inline Text Links
- Keyword Density
Heading Tags
The heading tag (for those who don't already know) is code used to specify
to the visitor and to the search engines what the topic is of your page
and/or subsections of it. You have 6 predefined heading tags to work with
ranging from <H1> to <H6>.
By default these tags appear larger than standard text in a browser and
are bold. These aspects can be adjusted using the font tags or by using
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS).
Due to their abuse by unethical webmasters and SEO's, the weight given
to heading tags is not what it could be however the content between these
tags is given increased weight over standard text. There are rules to
follow with the use of heading tags that must be adhered to. If you use
heading tags irresponsibly you run the risk of having your website penalized
for spam even though the abuse may be unintentional.
When using your heading tags try to follow these rules:
- Never use the same tag twice on a single page
- Try to be concise with your wording
- Use heading tags only when appropriate. If bold text will do then
go that route
- Don't use CSS to mask heading tags
Never use the same tag twice on a single page. While the <H1> tags
holds the greatest weight of the entire heading tags, its purpose is to
act as the primary heading of the page. If you use it twice you are obviously
not using it to define the main topic of the page. If you need to use
another heading tag use the <H2> tag. After that the <H3>
tag and so on. Generally I try never to use more than 2 heading tags on
a page.
Try to be concise with your wording. If you have a 2 keyword phrase that
you are trying to target and you make a heading that is 10 words long
then your keyword phrase only makes up about 20% of the total verbiage.
If you have a 4-word heading on the other hand you would then have a 50%
density and increased priority given to the keyword phrase you are targeting.
Use heading tags only when appropriate. If bold text will do then go
that route. I have seen sites with heading tags all over the place. If
overused the weight of the tags themselves are reduced with decreasing
content and "priority" being given to different phrases at various points
in the content. If you have so much great content that you feel you need
to use many heading tags you should consider dividing the content up into
multiple pages, each with its own tag and keyword target possibilities.
For the most part, rather than using additional heading tags, bolding
the content will suffice. The sizing will be kept the same as your usual
text and it will stand out to the reader as part of the text but with
added importance.
Don't use CSS to mask heading tags. This one just drives me nuts and
is unnecessary. Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) serve many great functions.
They can be used to define how a site functions, looks and feels however
they can also be used to mislead search engines and visitors alike. Each
tags has a default look and feel. It is fine to use CSS to adjust this
somewhat to fit how you want your site to look. What is not alright is
to adjust the look and feel to mislead search engines. It is a simple
enough task to define in CSS that your heading should appear as regular
text. Some unethical SEO's will also then place their style sheet in a
folder that is hidden from the search engine spiders. This is secure enough
until your competitors look at the cached copy of your page (and they
undoubtedly will at some point) see that you have hidden heading tags
and report you to the search engines as spamming. It's an unnecessary
risk that you don't need to take. Use your headings properly and you'll
do just fine.
Special Text
"Special text" (as it is used here) is any content on your
page that is set to stand out from the rest. This includes bold, underlined,
colored, highlighted, sizing and italic. This text is given weight higher
than standard content and rightfully so. Bold text, for example, is generally
used to define sub-headings (see above), or to pull content out on a page
to insure the visitor reads it. The same can be said for the other "special
text" definitions.
Search engines have thus been programmed to read this as more important
than the rest of the content and will give it increased weight. For example,
on our homepage we begin the content with "Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning
…" and have chosen to bold this text. This serves two purposes.
The first is to draw the eye to these words and further reinforce the
"brand". The second purpose (and it should always be the second) is to
add weight to the "Search Engine Positioning" portion of the name. It
effectively does both.
Reread your content and, if appropriate for BOTH visitors and search
engines, use special text when it will help draw the eye to important
information and also add weight to your keywords. This does not mean that
you should bold every instance of your targeted keywords nor does it mean
that you should avoid using special text when it does not involve your
keywords. Common sense and a reasonable grasp of sales and marketing techniques
should be your guide in establishing what should and should not be drawn
out with "special text".
Inline Text Links
Inline text links are links added right into text in the verbiage of
your content. For example, in this article series I may make reference
to past articles in the series. Were I to refer to the article on keyword
selection rather than simple making a simple reference to it as I just
have it might be better to write it as, "Were I to refer to the article
on keyword
selection rather …"
Like special text this serves two purposes. The first is to give the
reader a quick and easy way to find the find the information you are referring
to. The second purpose of this technique is to give added weight to this
phrase for the page on which the link is located and also to give weight
to the target page.
While this point is debatable, there is a relatively commonly held belief
that inline text links are given more weight that a text link which stands
alone. If we were to think like a search engine this makes sense. If the
link occurs within the content area then chances are it is highly relevant
to the content itself and the link should be counted with more strength
than a link placed in a footer simply to get a spider through the site.
Link "special text" this should only be employed if it helps the visitor
navigate your site. An additional benefit to inline text links is that
you can help direct your visitors to the pages you want them on. Rather
than simply relying on visitors to use your navigation bar as you are
hoping they will, with inline text links you can link to the internal
pages you are hoping they will get to such as your services page, or product
details.
Keyword Density
For those of you who have never heard the term "keyword density" before,
it is the percentage of your total content that is made up of your targeted
keywords. There is much debate in forums, SEO chat rooms and the like
as to what the "optimal" keyword density might be. Estimates seem to range
from 3% to 10%.
While I would be the first to admit that logic dictate that indeed there
is an optimal keyword density. Knowing that search engines operate on
mathematical formulas implies that this aspect of your website must have
some magic number associated with it that will give your content the greatest
chance of success.
With this in mind there are three points that you should consider:
- You do not work for Google or Yahoo! or any of the other major search
engines (and if you do you're not the target audience of this article).
You will never know 100% what this "magic number" is.
- Even if you did know what the optimal keyword density was today,
would you still know it after the next update? Like other aspects of
the search engine algorithm, optimal keyword densities change. You will
be chasing smoke if you try to constantly have the optimal density and
chances are you will hinder your efforts more than help by constantly
changing the densities of your site.
- The optimal keyword density for one search engine is not the same
as it is for another. Chasing the density of one may very well ruin
your efforts on another.
So what can you do? Your best bet is to simple place your targeted
keyword phrase in your content as often as possible while keeping the
content easily readable by a live visitor. Your goal here is not to sell
to search engines, it is to sell to people. I have seen sites that have
gone so overboard in increasing their keyword density that the content
itself reads horribly. If you are simply aware of the phrase that you
are targeting while you write your content then chances are you will attain
a keyword density somewhere between 3 and 5%. Stay in this range and,
provided that the other aspects of the optimization process are in place,
you will rank well across many of the search engines.
Also remember when you're looking over your page that when you're reading
it the targeted phrase may seem to stand out as it's used more than any
other phrase on the page and may even seem like it's a bit too much. Unless
you've obviously overdone it (approached the 10% rather than 5% end of
the spectrum) it's alright for this phrase to stand out. This is the phrase
that the searcher was searching for. When they see it on the page it will
be a reminder to them what they are looking for an seeing it a few times
will reinforce that you can help them find the information they need to
make the right decision.
Final Notes
In an effort to increase keyword densities, unethical webmasters will
often use tactics such as hidden text, extremely small font sizes, and
other tactics that basically hide text from a live visitor that they are
providing to a search engines. Take this advice, write quality content,
word it well and pay close attention to your phrasing and you will do
well. Use unethical tactics and your website may rank well in the short
term but once one of your competitors realizes what you're doing you will
be reported and your website may very well get penalized. Additionally,
if a visitor realizes that you're simply "tricking" the search engines
they may very well decide that you are not the type of company they want
to deal with; one that isn't concerned with integrity but rather one that
will use any trick to try to get at their money. Is this the message you
want to send?
Next Week
Next week in part five of our "Ten Steps To an Optimized Website"
series we will be covering internal links strategies and best practices.
This will cover everything from image links and scripts to inline and
basic text links.
Click here
to read the next article in the series >
Article by Dave Davies, Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning.
|